COMICS 101: The Brilliance of 1982’s X-MEN and NEW TEEN TITANS Crossover

Scott Tipton brings his long-running column COMICS 101 to 13th Dimension!

Scott Tipton has been writing COMICS 101 since 2003 and the feature has had homes at various websites. Now, he brings it to 13th Dimension, where we expect it will have a lengthy stay as a recurring feature. (It also means that Scott has been officially promoted to columnist, moving up from his position as a “contributor-at-large.” These titles are highly coveted, you know, and the backroom backstabbing is as vicious as anything you’d see on Game of Thrones.)

Anyway, with DC and Marvel’s recent announcement that they will be releasing two omnibi collecting most of the company’s crossovers, it was a perfect time for Scott to write about the seminal Marvel and DC Present the Uncanny X-Men and the New Teen Titans — and relaunch COMICS 101.

Not only that, our old buddy Anthony Durso of The Toyroom, has put together 13 GREAT DC/MARVEL CROSSOVERS WE’D LIKE TO SEE, even if there are no known plans to do any more of them (that we know of). Click here to check out that baby. (And click here to check out SUNDAY FUNNIES WITH KERRY CALLEN, which explains why Batman and Spider-Man don’t team up more often.)

But back to Scott. Here goes:

By SCOTT TIPTON

In light of the welcome news that Marvel and DC will be co-publishing a series of omnibus editions collecting their various and long-out-of-print crossover comics, let’s take a look back at what I still think is probably the single best of the inter-company crossover books, 1982’s Marvel and DC Present the Uncanny X-Men and the New Teen Titans.

Published as a single, 64-page issue, X-Men/Titans captured both teams at the height of their popularity, and with what most fans probably consider the definitive lineups for both teams, with Robin, Wonder Girl, Kid Flash, Starfire, Raven, Changeling and Cyborg appearing in the Titans, and the X-Men represented by what for me will always be the classic team: Cyclops, Storm, Colossus, Wolverine, Nightcrawler, Kitty Pryde and Professor Xavier.

The story, Apokolips…Now, was written by X-Men scribe Chris Claremont and drawn by Walt Simonson and Terry Austin, who did an excellent job of combining the fine linework and detail of the George Perez style people were accustomed to seeing on The New Teen Titans, with the strong character work and emotion that X-Men illustrators like Byrne and Cockrum usually brought to the table.

As for the plot, Claremont provided a doozy: DC’s Darkseid needs to resurrect Dark Phoenix (the then-deceased Jean Grey) so that the nearly all-powerful being can provide the power necessary to convert Earth into a new Apokolips, destroying all civilization in the process and reducing what survivors remain into Darkseid’s slaves. Resurrecting Dark Phoenix requires the harnessing of the emotional memories of her companions, the X-Men, and capturing all the remnants of her psychic residue from the places on the Earth where her power was most keenly felt. A job like that requires a local guide, and Darkseid has hired none other than Titans adversary Deathstroke the Terminator.

Darkseid sends his minions to infiltrate Xavier’s School and secretly tap the X-Men’s memories of Jean, and the same night a knock at the front door reveals what appears to be Jean’s ghost, begging her lover Scott Summers for help.

Meanwhile, miles away at Titans Tower, the Titans’ resident empath Raven has a precognitive dream about the return of Phoenix, a threat Starfire recognizes from her time in outer space.

It’s when the two teams finally meet up that things really start to get fun, and it was a rare moment in comics history that saw the two most popular competitive licenses meet up, both at the height of their popularity.

A word here about the book’s general setting. One of the best decisions made here (as well as in some of the earlier crossover books like the Superman/Spider-Man specials and Batman/Hulk) is to pretty much set mainstream continuity aside for the sake of telling a good story, and to assume the conceit that the Marvel and DC characters exist on the same world, in the same “universe” for lack of a better term, and always have. Rather than wasting a lot of time with parallel-universe psychobabble, the reader is expected to just absorb through context that this story is taking place outside regular continuity, (a notion established pretty much by a single comment of Robin’s in which he considers going to the Justice League or the Avengers for assistance) and it works just fine.

Claremont’s story here is the best kind of plotline for a crossover book like this: one that makes use of the histories and backstories of both groups of characters, and takes them all in a new and startling direction, yet leaves them back to their superficial status quo by story’s end, not requiring readers of either solo title to pick up this book to continue with their adventures. Claremont also has to be given credit for having the nerve to retread upon the hallowed ground of the “Dark Phoenix Saga,” a story which even in ’82 was already considered a classic. It’s a tough tightrope to walk, and Claremont pulls it off splendidly.

Claremont also does a fine job scripting the Titans characters, who sound pretty much as if Titans co-creator Marv Wolfman was behind the typewriter. Indeed, Claremont handles the Titans’ characterizations just as well, from Robin’s moralistic leadership to Starfire’s impulsive temper to Raven’s restrained, emotionless demeanor. Only Wonder Girl and Cyborg really get the short end of the stick here (as do Storm and Nightcrawler on the X-Men’s side of things), but with 17 characters to focus on, that’s understandable.

It’s also interesting in retrospect that this book was clearly published before Marvel decided that Wolverine was the solution to any comic’s sales problems, because although he’s featured prominently, he’s by no means the star of the book, and doesn’t get much more screen time than folks like Starfire or Raven. Indeed, there’s no doubt that, although Claremont strives to include everyone in the story, to his mind, Scott Summers is the heart of the X-Men, and it’s generally through his eyes that the story turns.

When the X-Men and the Titans meet up and start working together, it’s clear that both Claremont and Simonson are having fun. With only a few flashes of dialogue here and there Claremont manages to touch on all kinds of character points, such as Kid Flash’s then-prominent jingoism and xenophobia, Kitty Pryde’s innocence, Peter and Kitty’s adolescent jealousy, Starfire’s flirtatiousness, Robin’s cool confidence of command, and lots more. Claremont also finds some good material in pairing up new X-Titan combinations, such as the youthful attraction between Gar Logan and Kitty Pryde.

Another telling moment comes with a strategy session between the teams’ two leaders, Cyclops and Robin, in which they plot to destroy Darkseid’s machine and then get out to gather help, in the form of “every super-hero on Earth.” They are the two most human and least powerful members of their teams, keenly aware of their own mortality and the fact that they’re hopelessly overmatched in this fight, and yet they go in anyway, because that’s what heroes do.

As for Simonson, he takes advantage of the expanded page count by giving us more than the usual amount of full-page panels or page-length panels, as well as altering the storytelling to give us a fair amount of three- or four-panel pages. The result is a sense of grandeur and “bigness,” for lack of a better word.

Simonson also does an excellent job with his character acting, in getting the individual heroes and villains’ characterizations to come across through their actions, poses and physical appearances, particularly with Darkseid, who always carries himself in a very blase, almost casual fashion, even when under attack.

Funny, exciting and even a little sad, X-Men/New Teen Titans gives you just what you want from a crossover book, spotlighting what’s best about both series while taking them to places you’ve never seen before.

There are a lot of good stories in those upcoming collections, but trust me when I say that there are none better.

MORE

— 13 DC/MARVEL Crossovers We’d Like to See. Click here.

— SUNDAY FUNNIES WITH KERRY CALLEN: Why BATMAN and SPIDER-MAN Don’t Team Up Very Often. Click here.

Scott Tipton is a 13th Dimension columnist and the site’s longest-tenured regular not named Dan Greenfield. He and Dan co-write the site’s HOT PICKS and RETRO HOT PICKS columns and Scott also writes COMICS 101. He’s perhaps best known as the writer of scores of Star Trek comics published by IDW.

Author: Dan Greenfield

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9 Comments

  1. Nice to see that Scott will be doing new C101 columns.

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  2. They need to reprint that in an oversized standalone hardcover edition similar to the reprints DC has been doing lately like the Legion Of Superheroes or Superman vs Wonder Woman Treasury books from a little while back ago.

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  3. I absolutely loved this team up when it came out (although I didn’t find a copy until Columbus Day weekend). It was everything you could ask for in a crossover event. And the fact that it happened when both series were at their peaks made it even more special!

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  4. I had trouble enjoying this one when I was a kid. this was before Jean came back in 86, so the idea of resurrecting her was a big deal. I felt that it shouldn’t have been done and undone all in an out of continuity one-off.

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    • Wolverine vs Deathstroke? Could have been a series all by itself.

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  5. This is an absolute masterpiece. And credit should be given to the colorist who never obscures Walt’s incredible line work.

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    • Welcome back, Comics 101!

      Wolverine vs Deathstroke? Could be a series all by itself!

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  6. This great out-of-continuity story made one major contribution to New Gods lore that persists to this day: namely, the awesome Source Wall, with those giant heads projecting eye-beams from the edge of space. It’s a design worthy of Jack Kirby; but it originated with the great Walt Simonson. Walt seems to have combined two of Kirby’s authentic 4th World ideas: the Wall (which stood in Highfather’s inner sanctum on New Genesis) and the Promethean Giants. It’s an incredible design, and probably the best addition to the New Gods saga by someone other than Kirby.

    I met Simonson in the 1990s (at Jim Hanley’s Universe in NYC), and mentioned that I considered him the best interpreter of the 4th World. He was surprised, because at the time his only work on that concept had been the Titans/X-Men crossover. I replied that in that single story, he had given us the magnificent Source Wall, which was precisely the kind of religio-mythological iconography Kirby was forging in his saga. Walt smiled like a proud father, and said something like, “Yeah, that WAS a great idea. Thanks”—before answering another fan’s question.

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